International Cycling Union takes away his seven wins and bans him from competition for life based on report about elaborate doping scheme. He has long denied allegations and declines to comment.

Cycling's governing body Monday accepted the findings of a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report about an elaborate doping program involving Lance Armstrong and stripped the famed athlete of his seven Tour de France titles and banned him from competition for life.

International Cycling Union (UCI) President Pat McQuaid said in Geneva he was "sickened" by the USDA findings, adding, "Lance Armstrong has no place in cycling.… He deserves to be forgotten."

USADA sent 1,000-plus pages to UCI, including a report from 26 witnesses, including 11 former Armstrong teammates, who alleged Armstrong and his teams used steroids, the blood-booster EPO, blood transfusions and testosterone in a sophisticated doping scheme during his Tour de France title run.

"It's a very nasty story," said Don Catlin, the International Olympic Committee medical commission member who has presided over sports drug testing since the 1980s. "Doping control has a lot of problems."

Armstrong has long denied the doping allegations and has said he's passed hundreds of drug tests. On Monday he declined to comment. At a charity fundraiser Sunday in Texas for Livestrong, his cancer charity, he told a crowd he's faced a "very difficult" few weeks.

He also lost another longtime sponsor Monday, as Oakley sunglasses dropped Armstrong. Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme wants Armstrong to repay prize money for the championships he won from 1999 to 2005 and says the record books should be wiped clean without any champion named for that period.

Some Livestrong donors also want their money back. Michael Birdsong, of Salt Lake City, said he's contributed to Livestrong. "The charity was established and publicized and got their funds based on a fraud," he told CNN.

Yet, in assessing the USADA report, some close to the world of doping lament a harsher reality.

"This is a blueprint for all sport that still applies this very minute," said Victor Conte, the notorious mastermind of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) that supplied steroids and other banned substances to home run king Barry Bonds, Olympic sprinter Marion Jones and former world-champion boxer Shane Mosley.

Conte, who now identifies himself as an advocate for clean sports, said part of the blame falls on inadequate drug testing by sports agencies.

The USADA report alleges Armstrong used testosterone on the Tour to heal micro-sized tears and cuts in his muscle tissue from endurance racing.

Conte says USADA itself does not employ enough of the more sophisticated and expensive Carbon Isotope Ratio test for testosterone. The CIR test detects any presence of synthetic testosterone; the cheaper test requires highly elevated testosterone levels to declare a positive.

"It's the biggest loophole in all of drug testing, because when you ask what the most anabolic drug is for power and speed, it's testosterone," Conte said. "The CIR test can detect use for up to two weeks. There wouldn't have been seven Tour de France titles by Lance Armstrong if they had done this."

In its report, USDA said, among other things, Armstrong and teammates:

-- Used small doses of performance-enhancing testosterone and EPO at night, taking advantage of the courtesy testers gave not to interrupt the riders' rest after a daylong competition. Before or just after dawn, they would be back below positive levels.

The cat-and-mouse games were underway for Armstrong in 1998, a year before the Texan battled back from testicular cancer to win the first of his seven straight Tours, according to the report.

At that year's World Championships in the Netherlands, a UCI tester entered a bed-and-breakfast common area linking the bedrooms of Armstrong, fellow riders Christian Vande Velde and Jonathan Vaughters and team doctor Pedro Celaya.

Alarmed that Armstrong's use of EPO would generate a positive test showing the volume of his red blood cells above the acceptable 50%, Celaya shuffled to his car to "retrieve a liter of saline," then used it to lower Armstrong's red blood cells toward a normal male's 45% level.

The doctor allegedly tucked the saline "under his raincoat and smuggled [it] right past the UCI tester and into Armstrong's bedroom," according to the report. "Celaya closed the bedroom door and administered the saline to Armstrong … without alerting the UCI tester to their activities."

Catlin fumes that, "We should not be sitting here 25 years after this type of doping began, and still not have a great test for EPO." EPO is a biotech drug developed to treat anemia, which has been used to illegally benefit athletes in many endurance sports.